10 Times In Gaming You Got SCAMMED
7. WWE 2K20
The WWE 2K games are well known for their absolute inconsistency where basically everything is concerned. From their perennially dated graphics to their terrible online netcode and abundance of potentially game-breaking glitches, even the better games in the series are very far from perfect.
And then there's WWE 2K20, a game so fundamentally unfit for sale that it led to 2K cancelling WWE 2K21 and putting the series on ice for more than two years.
Tellingly, WWE 2K20 was the first game in the series not to be developed by regular outfit Yuke's, with 2K's assist studio Visual Concepts stepping up to take the full reins.
The game was immediately panned by just about everyone on release, for its poor graphics, inconsistent physics, targeting, and hit detection, and the flabbergasting number of glitches.
Fans summarily mocked the game on social media by sharing their meme-worthy glitches alongside the trending hashtag #FixWWE2K20, but it didn't end there.
Many who splashed out $130 for the Collector's Edition found that the art cards supposed to be signed by Edge hadn't been, prompting Edge himself to try and make arrangements with fans before 2K Support themselves stepped in.
Worse still, a bug made the game temporarily unplayable for many at the start of 2020, placing a firm capper on a catastrophic dumpster fire of a game that should've never been brought to market.
Though WWE fans are a loyal bunch, even many of them voted with their wallets as WWE 2K20 was a commercial disappointment, causing 2K to put the series on temporary hiatus.
While fans are hopeful that the upcoming WWE 2K22 will mark a major return to form for the series, you'd be smart to wait for reviews.